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Loss firm's annual report narratives and share price anticipation of earnings

Schleicher, T., Hussainey, K., Walker, M

The British Accounting Review. 2007;39(2):153-171.

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Abstract

We extend prior research into the association between disclosure quality and share price anticipation of earnings by discriminating between firms that report profits and firms that report losses. As a measure of disclosure quality we count the number of forward-looking earnings statements in annual report narratives. To measure the extent to which current share price movements anticipate future earnings changes we regress current stock returns on current and future earnings changes. The coefficients on the future earnings change variables are our measure of share price anticipation of earnings. Our regression results show that the association between annual report narratives and share price anticipation of earnings is not the same for profit and loss firms. For loss firms we find that the ability of stock returns to anticipate next period's earnings change is significantly greater when the firm provides a large number of earnings predictions in annual report narratives. We make no such observation for profit firms. In addition, once we control for variations in the intrinsic lead–lag relation between returns and earnings across industries, the observed difference between profit and loss firms becomes statistically significant. Overall, our results are consistent with annual report narratives being a particularly important source of information for loss-making firms.

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
Content type:
Published date:
ISSN:
Volume:
39
Issue:
2
Start page:
153
End page:
171
Total:
19
Pagination:
153-171
Digital Object Identifier:
10.1016/j.bar.2007.03.005
General notes:
  • prize winner. best paper in BAR in 2007
Access state:
Active

Institutional metadata

University researcher(s):

Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:1b4647
Created:
26th August, 2009, 23:19:00
Last modified by:
Walker, Martin
Last modified:
28th May, 2015, 21:03:05

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